When you drop a ball from, say, 3 metres, it will bounce back to roughly 2 metres.
As long as the tennis ball is not thrust downward, yes, the tennis ball will bounce back to the same proportion of its original height, no matter how far it's dropped, as long as the height is small enough that air resistance can be ignored. The ball will eventually come to rest due to this air resistance.
The height from which the ball is dropped is the independent variable, as it is what is being manipulated. The height of the ball's bounce is the dependent variable, as it is what is being measured and is affected by the height from which the ball is dropped.
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher
Yes.
A tennis ball typically bounces to about 50-60% of the height it was dropped from. So, if dropped from 5 feet onto asphalt, it would bounce back up to around 2.5 to 3 feet. The actual height can vary depending on factors like the ball's pressure, surface condition, and angle of impact.
Yes, the height of a bounce is affected by the height from which the ball is dropped. The higher the ball is dropped from, the higher it will bounce back due to the transfer of potential energy to kinetic energy during the bounce.
Yes, the height of a ball's bounce is affected by the height from which it is dropped. The higher the drop height, the higher the bounce height due to the conservation of mechanical energy. When the ball is dropped from a greater height, it gains more potential energy, which is converted to kinetic energy during the bounce resulting in a higher bounce height.
31 m/s
You can measure how high a ball bounces by dropping it from a certain height and then measuring the height it rebounds to. The ratio of the height it rebounds to the height it was dropped from gives you an idea of the ball's elasticity or bounciness.
Yes, the height from which the ball is dropped is the independent variable in this scenario. It is the variable that is intentionally changed or manipulated to observe its effect on the height of the ball's bounce, which is the dependent variable.
The higher the ball is dropped from, the higher it will bounce back. This is due to potential energy converting to kinetic energy upon impact with the ground, propelling the ball higher when dropped from greater heights. Ultimately, the bounce height depends on factors like gravity, air resistance, and the material of the ball.